Romelu Lukaku: Outscoring Cristiano Ronaldo and leading Inter’s title charge

Romelu Lukaku: Outscoring Cristiano Ronaldo and leading Inter’s title charge

Lukaku has scored more goals at this stage of a season than he has ever before in his career

“I heard people say Romelu Lukaku was a donkey. I heard all sorts not even that long ago!”

Inter Milan boss Antonio Conte was certainly unimpressed earlier this week by past criticism of his striker, and it is easy to see why.

In his first season at the Italian club, Romelu Lukaku has hit 14 goals in just 18 games – outscoring Cristiano Ronaldo – and has helped Inter to the top of Serie A as they look to threaten Juventus’ eight-year dominance of the league.

Conte + Lukaku = match made in heaven?

One of the most significant reasons behind Lukaku’s impressive start to life in Italy is his relationship with Conte.

This is the first time the pair have worked together but they have admired each other’s abilities from afar for a number of years.

Lukaku first caught Conte’s eye when the Italian was at Juventus – a club he managed from 2011 until 2014 – before making a firmer attempt to sign the striker when he became Chelsea boss in 2016, only to be beaten to his signing by Manchester United.

“I wanted Romelu very strongly when I was at Chelsea, even back at Juventus,” said Conte earlier this week. “I always said Romelu was a rough diamond that needed work to smooth him out.

“Now I can get to work on polishing the diamond.”

Conte’s management style, meanwhile, first caught Lukaku’s eye three years ago when he came up against a team managed by the 50-year-old while playing for Belgium against Italy.

“Belgium played Italy in a friendly in the run up to Euro 2016,” says Smith, who sat down with Lukaku for a lengthy one-to-one interview in November last year.

“The Italians beat them 3-1 and Lukaku said the moment he knew he wanted to play for Conte was after the friendly.

“He felt the Italians beat the Belgians in that game in every single department. Lukaku knew from that moment on that he wanted to work with Conte.”

Lukaku has always possessed power and pace but Conte and his coaching staff have worked on developing his tactical understanding of the game.

Smith adds: “In Italy, a lot of it is about shape – knowing where to stand depending on where the ball is on the pitch – a lot of players don’t like that but Lukaku is enjoying it.

“He is doing all of this tactical work on the training field and doing all this analysis work on his own trying to find weak spots in the defenders.

“His view is that in England football is much more intense and better to watch, but is essentially chaotic. However, in Serie A he really has to think about what he is doing and I think that will make him a better player.”

Misused and misunderstood at Manchester United?

Looking at the statistics, it is hard to argue that Lukaku is anything other than one of the best strikers in world football.

In Europe’s top five leagues, only Robert Lewandowski (19), Ciro Immobile (19), Timo Werner (18) and Jamie Vardy (17) have scored more goals than Lukaku who, with 14 goals, looks well on course to surpass his best-ever return of 25 goals in a single league campaign.

The rich vein of form is nothing new.

In his debut season at Manchester United he became one of only 11 United players to hit 25 goals or more in a campaign since 1992-93. Eric Cantona, Andy Cole and current manager Solskjaer (25 each) are among the strikers who never matched Lukaku’s 27-goal tally in a United campaign.

“I think the way he is viewed in England is extraordinary, given his record,” adds Smith. “He is viewed as sort of a laughing stock but that view of Lukaku is detached from reality.

“He is an elite forward. He is only 26 but has been one of the leading strikers in Europe for about eight years.

“Even at United he scored 42 goals in around 90 games, which is not bad – one in every two which is what strikers aim for.”

That strike rate is all the more impressive when you could argue he wasn’t used correctly at Manchester United.